INDEX. 



Authors the titles only of whose works are cited are not, as a rule, referred to in 

 this index. 



Abbott, T. K., II. 221 



Abstract ideas, I. 468, 508; II. 48 



Abstract qualities, II. 329-37, 340 



Abstraction, I. 505; II. 346 fl. See 

 distraction 



Accommodation, feeling of, II. 93, 

 235 



Acquaintance, I. 220 



Acquired characters, see inheritance 



Acquisitiveness, II. 422, 679 



Actors, their emotions whilst play- 

 ing, II. 464 



Adaptation of mind to environmeai, 

 results in our knowing the im- 

 pressing circumstances, 625 ff. 



JSsthetic principles, II. 639, 672 



After-images, I. 645-7; II. 67, 200, 

 604 



Agoraphobia, II. 421 



Agraphia, I. 40, 62 



Alfieri, II 543 



Allen. G., I. 144; II. 631 



Alteration of one impression by 

 another one simultaneously tak- 

 ing place, II. 28 If., 201 



Allcrnatiug jjersonality, I. 379 ff. 



Ambiiruity of optical sensations, II. 

 231-7 



Amidox, I. 100 



Anmesia in hysterical disease, I 384 

 ff . ; accompanies anoesthesia, 386, 

 6S2; in hypnotic trance, II. 602. 

 ^ae forgetting 



Amputated limbs, feeling of, II. 

 38-9, 105 



Anaesthesia, in hysterics, I. 203 ff. ; 

 involves correlated amnesia, 386; 

 movements executed during, II. 

 105,489-92, 520-1: and emotion, 

 455-6; in hypnotism, 606-9 



Analogies, the perception of, I. 530 



Analysis, I. 502; II. 344 



Anger, II. 409, 460, 478 



Aphasia, motor, I. 37, 62; sensory, 

 I. 53-4-5; optical, I. 60; amnesia 

 in, 640, 684; II. 58 



Apperception, II. 107 ff. 



Apperception, transcendental Unity 

 of, I. 362 



Appropriateness, characterizes men- 

 tal acts, I. 13 



Apraxia, I. 52 



A priori connections exist only be- 

 tween objects of perception and 

 '"novements, not between sensory 

 laeas, II. 581. J. ^?w?7 ideas and 

 experience. Chapter XXVIII. A 

 pi-iori propositions, II. 661-5 



Archer, W., II. 464 



Arithmetic, II. 654. 



Articular sensibility, II. 189 ff. 



Association, Chapter XIV: is not 

 of idea.s, but of things thought of, 



I. 554; examples of, 555 ff. ; its 

 rapidity, 557 ff. ; by contiguity, 

 561; elementary law of,566;'mixed' 

 association, 571; conditions of, 

 575 ff. ; by similarity, 578; three 

 kinds of association compared, 

 580; in voluntary thought, 583; by 

 contrast, 593; history of the doc- 

 trine of, 594; association the means 

 of localization, II. 158 ff. ; connec- 

 tion of association by similarity 

 with reasoning, 345 ff'. 



Association ism, I. 161 

 Associationist theorj' of the self, I. 

 342, :^50 ff. ; of space-perception, 



II. 271 ff. 

 Asymbolia, I. 52 



Attention, Chapter XI — to how 

 many things possible, I. 405 ff. ; 

 to simultaneous sight and sound, 

 411 ff.; its varieties, 416; pas- 

 sive, 417: voluntary. 42 ff. ; its 

 effects, 424 ff. ; its iutlueuce on r& 

 691 



